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Armenian Filmmaker Seeks Jewish Viewers

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  • Armenian Filmmaker Seeks Jewish Viewers

    ARMENIAN FILMMAKER SEEKS JEWISH VIEWERS
    By Shayndi Raice

    Jewish Advocate, MA
    June 5 2006

    Franchot Lubin (left) and David Davidian produced a film on the
    Armenian genocide.Cites connections between Nazi genocide of Jews
    and Turkish genocide of Armenians.

    The Armenian genocide might not seem like a Jewish issue, but it should
    be according to Armenian filmmaker David Davidian, who has submitted
    a DVD on the genocide to the 2006 Boston Jewish Film Festival.

    According to Davidian, producer of "The 1915 Turkish Genocide of the
    Armenians" and director of the Genocide Archive Project, the Holocaust
    and the Armenian genocide are closely related. In 1939, Hitler told
    his generals that they should not be worried about world condemnation
    for murdering millions of Jews because nobody remembered what happened
    to the Armenians. Davidian also suggested that many of the techniques
    used by Hitler were in fact copied from the Turkish genocide of the
    Armenians. Death marches, round-ups, and marking Armenian homes were
    all trademarks of the Turkish genocide, said Davidian.

    "There are philosophical and actual connections," he said. "The
    [Armenian] genocide was the first state-sponsored genocide against its
    own citizens. The second was Hitler. World governments ignored it as
    an internal problem. These things, even if denied, can't be ignored
    because when they're ignored it encourages someone else to do it."

    Davidian produced the film with director Franchot Lubin, who had
    previous experience collecting survivor testimonies while working
    for Steven Spielberg's "Survivors of the Shoah" documentary. The two
    filmmakers documented accounts of Armenian genocide survivors who live
    in the Boston area today, some more than 100 years old. In addition
    to the submission to the Boston Jewish Film Festival, which will
    take place this fall, the two men have sent their film to hundreds
    of U.S. Congressmen as part of an education campaign.

    "If the world did something about it in 1915, there would have been
    much less of chance of Hitler doing what he did to the European Jews,"
    said Davidian.

    Although the film does not seem to have an easily apparent Jewish
    theme, Sarah Rubin of the Boston Jewish Film Festival said that while
    films must be relevant to the Jewish community, "We do stretch the
    envelope."

    While she could not comment on the film's chances of being chosen
    for the festival, she added: "There are times when there might seem
    to be something that isn't strictly Jewish themed but we program it
    in because there's a clear connection."

    http://www.thejewishadvocate.com/thi s_weeks_issue/news/?content_id=1327
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